Office workers are spending more time organising and attending meetings they feel are unnecessary

Office workers across the UK spend two years of their lives preparing for and attending meetings.

Published:10:05Thursday 28 April 2016

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Office workers across the UK spend two years of their lives preparing for and attending meetings.

According to new research from eShare, office workers are spending around 25 per cent of their working week doing this - and many feel the meetings are unnecessary.

The survey of 1,005 office workers revealed that the average worker attends 3.7 meetings every week, spending one hour nine minutes preparing for each meeting and one hour 22 minutes actually attending it.

In any given working week, this means that office workers are spending more than a day preparing for, and attending meetings.

Across a 40 year career, this equates to a total of 17,470 hours - two entire years of someone’s life or around 10 years of work time.

Alister Esam, CEO, eShare, said: “Meetings are an integral part of business life, but many are inefficient, with incorrect agendas and attendees unable to locate the required background information when they need it.

“With the average office worker spending more than a day every week on meetings, addressing the waste of hours resulting from ineffective and inefficient meetings could be the single biggest boost to productivity for any organisation.”

eShare recently launched MeetingSquared, a new app for anyone who organises or attends meetings, and looks to bring an end to the inefficient preparation, scheduling and management of meetings.

The research found that 40 per cent of office workers feel that at least half of the meetings they attend are unnecessary, while 30 per cent believe that most meetings they attend are inefficient and could be much shorter.

The research revealed that many office workers (one in five) still attend meetings with agendas and supporting materials printed out on paper, but also that there is a worrying lack of diligence when the meeting is finished. 11 per cent of research respondents admitted that after most meetings they just throw away the agenda and printed materials, which has a number of security implications.

Almost half of respondents (45.7 per cent) said they often find their mind wondering onto other topics when in meetings, further highlighting the fact that meetings need to be more focused and goal-orientated.

“Anyone attending a meeting must have the relevant emails, documents and agenda available on their device, and be able to annotate and share those with ease,” concluded Alister Esam. “Furthermore, actions should be agreed and recorded so you don’t have to rely on an attendee’s faulty memory to refer to what was discussed. Other areas of business have been brought up-to-date in terms of attitudes and technology, and it is high time that meetings did the same.”